[ close ]


Bg1

Spread this message with Digg, Del.icio.us, Reddit, or Stumbleupon, and subscribe to the RSS Feed to track articles

Welcome to Richistan, USA

Published 08/13/07 Paul Craig Roberts* - Print Article
E-mail - editor@economyincisis.org

Home of the Few and Ultra-Wealthy

The rich are getting much richer and luxuriating in the most fantastic conspicuous consumption since the Gilded Age. Robert Frank has dubbed the new American world of the super-rich “Richistan.”

In Richistan there is a two-year waiting list for $50 million 200- foot yachts. In Richistan Rolex watches are considered Wal-Mart junk. Richistanians join clubs open only to those with $100 million, pay $650,000 for golf club memberships, eat $50 hamburgers and $1,000 omelettes, drink $90 a bottle Bling mineral water and down $10,000 “martinis on a rock” (gin or vodka poured over a diamond) at New York’s Algonquin Hotel.

Who are the Richistanians? They are CEOs who have moved their companies abroad and converted the wages they formerly paid Americans into $100 million compensation packages for themselves. They are investment bankers and hedge fund managers, who created the subprime mortgage derivatives that currently threaten to collapse the economy. One of them was paid $1.7 billion last year. The $575 million that each of 25 other top earners were paid is paltry by comparison, but unimaginable wealth to everyone else.

With the real wages and salaries of American civilian workers lower than 5 years ago, with their debts at all time highs, with the prices of their main asset--their homes--under pressure from overbuilding and fraudulent finance, and with scant opportunities to rise for the children they struggled to educate, Americans face a dim future.

In America today the greatest rewards go to investment bankers, who collect fees for creating financing packages for debt. These packages include the tottering subprime mortgage derivatives. Recently, a top official of the Bank of France acknowledged that the real values of repackaged debt instruments are unknown to both buyers and sellers. Many of the derivatives have never been priced by the market.

Richistan wealth may prove artificial and crash, bringing an end to the new Gilded Age. But the plight of the rich in distress will never compare to the decimation of America’s middle class. The offshoring of American jobs has destroyed opportunities for generations of Americans.

*The above has been excerpted from “Return of The Robber Barons” by Paul Craig Roberts. Roberts served as Assistant Secretary to the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was an editor and columnist for the Wall Street Journal and Business Week. In 1993, Forbes Media Guide ranked him as one of the top seven journalists in the United States. Currently he is a nationally syndicated columnist for Creators Syndicate and a frequent contributor to EconomyInCrisis.org.

Click here to contact your Representative in Congress.

Spread this message with Digg, Del.icio.us, Reddit, or Stumbleupon, and subscribe to the RSS Feed to track articles

Bg1

Economy In Crisis relies on financial support from its readers. Learn more.

Your endorsement is greatly appreciated. Click here for other ways to get involved.

Bg1

Comment on this article

Subject
Comment


Article Comments From Readers

guest says "Crooks, Thieves, Evil Doers" on 01/26/08
They all brokered deals that sold off America bit by bit and in the process became tycoons. Nobody cared and nobody stopped them.

guest says "It is the nature of capitalism" on 09/13/07
It is the nature of capitalism: the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

In other words, money makes money.

This was all set out by Marx so Americans can't say they were warned.

This is the system you wanted and that you went to other countries and killed many of their citizens to impose the exact same system that you are now finding isn't working for you (the ordinary American I mean).

I guess it's a bit too late to complain about it now. How many deaths do Americans have from their fanaticism about capitalism?

Americans are just like the Crusaders (fanatical Christians) who thought Christianity was the only answer and killed many in the name of Christianity.

guest says "Context Counts" on 08/21/07
Guest's comments may go a little further than I would take them (I think adoption is a great idea, although I agree that overpopulation is a problem), but at least he can write a few articulate lines using proper grammar and punctuation.

You don't have to be some kind of grammar Nazi to think that the decline in our expectations of our society and leaders correlates with the decline in our ability to communicate.

guest says "clever" on 08/18/07
Wow what a clever solution. You must have just thought of that. Thats so clever.

guest says "What can be done?" on 08/14/07
Will salary caps ever be implemented? Will off shoring ever stop? Will the importation of illegal aliens ever be halted and the aliens deported?
I'd love to have a strong, healthy, vibrant America where honesty and hard work mattered. A nation where job security was a priority and workers were paid fairly for their labor and contribution to the greater good of society.
Will it ever happen? I would hope so, but things are looking worse every passing year.
Perhaps the best thing to do is neither have children nor adopt. Today's children born to non-millionaire families will end up being the indentured servants or slaves of the ultra rich.
If there is no way to fix politics, people should fix themselves and stop reproducing to break the pattern of economic slavery created by Capitalism.

Bg1